45th Annual Meeting of the Division of Plasma Physics

October 27-31, 2003
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Meeting ID: DPP03

Meeting Announcement Program/Bulletin Registration Housing Abstract Submission

search DPP 03

 

 

 

 

menu courtesy of milonic.co.uk/menu

Virtual Pressroom

MIT "plasmatron" drastically reduces smog emissions in a diesel bus

Oct. 30, 2003
Thursday, 2 pm
Invited Session RI
ACC, Brazos

MIT's plasmatron coupled with 
	  an exhaust treatment catalyst removed 90 percent of the smog-producing
	  nitrogen oxides (NO<sub>x</sub>) emitted from the bus.
PHOTO COURTESY/ARVINMERITOR

MIT's plasmatron coupled with an exhaust treatment catalyst removed 90 percent of the smog-producing nitrogen oxides (NOx) emitted from the bus.

MIT physicists will report a new advance with the plasmatron, a small device that converts part of a fuel into a hydrogen-rich gas that reduces the emission of pollutants from vehicles. Developed by MIT researchers, the plasmatron was tested on a diesel-engine bus in Columbus, Indiana. The bus was tested by a team of engineers from ArvinMeritor, a major automotive and heavy truck components manufacturer which has licensed the plasmatron technology from MIT.

At the meeting, the MIT researchers will report that the plasmatron device, used with a special catalyst that treats the exhaust, reduced nitrous oxides from the vehicle by 90 percent. Nitrous oxides (NOx) are a major component of smog. In development for a half-dozen years, the plasmatron is showing special promise for early commercialization in diesel engines, which power many buses and trucks. The MIT researchers believe the plasmatron may provide an excellent means for those vehicles to meet stricter EPA standards planned to go into effect by 2007 for buses and heavy trucks. The plasmatron technology can also be used in gasoline engines, and makes them run potentially 30% times more efficiently while also being affordable and very clean.

The work is funded by the Department of Energy's FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies Program and by ArvinMeritor.

Contacts
Leslie Bromberg, MIT, 617-308-1936
Dan Cohn, MIT, 617-834-9411

Further information:
Extended summary of work and images: HTML

[RI2.003] Plasma promoted manufacturing of hydrogen and vehicular applications
Abstract: http://www.aps.org/meet/DPP03/baps/abs/S2020003.html

Reporters seeking additional information should contact David Harris, 301-209-3238, harris@aps.org or Ben Stein, 301-209-3091, bstein@aip.org.